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Turkey’s opposition plots fightback against Erdoğan

Kemal Kilicdaroglu

Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu (C) the 74-year-old leader of the center-left, pro-secular Republican People's Party, or CHP, arrives for a press conference in Ankara on May 15, 2023. Turkey braced on May 15, 2023 for its first election runoff after a night of high drama showed President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan edging ahead of his secular rival but failing to secure a first-round win. BULENT KILIC / AFP

Turkey’s opposition tried on Wednesday to recover from a crushingly disappointing election performance and launch a new attack aimed at beating President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in a May 28 runoff, Agence France-Presse reported.

Secular leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu huddled with the other five heads of his alliance on Wednesday to plot a harder-edged strategy for ending Erdoğan’s two-decade domination of Turkey.

Media reports said he had fired his PR team and planned to tap Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu — who has a history of bad blood with Erdoğan — to spearhead his campaign.

The reported promotion of İmamoğlu and the mayor’s strategist Canan Kaftancıoğlu marks a reversal for Turkey’s grandfatherly opposition leader.

The 74-year-old former civil servant tried to run an inclusive campaign that addressed voters in chatty clips recorded from his kitchen and ignored Erdoğan’s personal barbs.

That approach worked — up to a point.

The opposition deprived Erdoğan of an outright election victory for the first time and collected more votes than at any point of his rule.

But Kılıçdaroğlu’s 44.9 percent still trailed Erdoğan’s 49.5 percent of the vote.

Pre-election polls showed Kılıçdaroğlu leading and possibly even winning outright on Sunday.

Kılıçdaroğlu’s fightback began with a video on Tuesday in which he stared straight into the camera and slapped his desk a few times after banging his heart with his fist.

“I am here! I am here!” he shouted. “I am here!”

‘Slight deficiencies’

Erdoğan looked far more relaxed as he assessed his performance on late-night television on Tuesday.

The 69-year-old conceded that his Islamic-rooted party had lost a few seats in parliament and suffered from “slight deficiencies.”

Provisional results showed his conservative alliance’s share falling from 333 to 322 in the 600-seat parliament.

“Unfortunately, my party suffered some declines, there’s a slight deficiency,” Erdoğan said in the interview.

“We need to make our preparations to eliminate them. We will do our internal accounting and take the necessary steps.”

It was a rare admission for Turkey’s longest-serving leader.

But he spoke in measured tones befitting an incumbent who is entering the second round as the overwhelming favorite.

The remaining votes went to a little-known ultranationalist who has much more in common with the right-wing Erdoğan than the leftist Kılıçdaroğlu.

Erdoğan said he would visit southeastern regions this weekend that were hit by two catastrophic earthquakes in February in which more than 50,000 lost their lives.

The president retained strong support in the area despite initial anger at the government’s delayed search and rescue work.

Erdoğan added that his team will be meeting with younger voters in Istanbul and Ankara to try and win in Turkey’s two most important cities.

İmamoğlu and Ankara Mayor Mansur Yavaş beat out Erdoğan’s allies in 2019 municipal polls.

‘Credible and consistent’

The campaign’s second stage is being accompanied by Turkish market turmoil that has seen the lira near historic lows against the dollar.

Investors are starting to price in an Erdoğan victory and the long-term continuation of his unconventional economic policies.

The cost of insuring exposure to Turkey’s debt is rising out of fears that the country’s once-vibrant banking sector could soon experience serious difficulties.

Erdoğan’s decision to force Turkey’s central bank to fight historically high inflation with lower interest rates has put unprecedented pressure on the lira.

Analysts believe Erdoğan tried to prop up the lira ahead of elections through indirect market interventions that drained Turkey’s hard currency reserves.

His government also introduced rules that required banks to purchase more and more liras with their foreign currencies.

Some analysts warn Turkey might have to impose capital controls if Erdoğan — who has pledged to keep interest rates low as long as he remains in office — does not reverse course.

“Our focus after the election will be whether the policy mix becomes more credible and consistent,” the ratings agency Fitch said.

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